
*t 




V F ^ 



1 \. ' 



^ \^ 



' * ) :' ^ >. ' 



\ ' 









LIBRARY OF CONGRESS. 

§]pi^ ittp^rig]^ !f n. 

Shelf _..t_M.& 5 



4Si 



UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. 




i 





,^1^ 



'^^ 



I-"^. 




r OL^vn^cxyi^- /^ 




The Blind Canary 



3^ 



HUGH FARRAR McDERMOTT 



SECOND EDITION 

(revised, with additions) 



v- 






NEW YORK 
G..P. PUTNAM'S SONS 

27 & 29 WEST 23D STREET 
1 88-, 



-^t) :^''^^'^ 



w\s ^ 



Copyright by 

G. P. PUTNAM'S SONS 

1883 



Press of 

G. P. P tit nam's Sons 

New York 



TO THE AUTHOR. 



Sweet minstrel, oft this little book of verse 

Comes to my hand, a token of thy love ; 
And, as its potent lines stray thoughts coerce, 

I feast my heart on manna from above. 
To few pure souls is given the power that thou 

Hast shown, O poet, in thy gentler mien ! 
As stately ships calm ocean's ripples plow, 

So thy soft music, welcome, comes between 
The hours of toil and twilight's restful time, 

When Nature calls for all surcease of care ; 
'T is then I revel in thy soothing rhyme, 

And greet the mind whose majesty is there. 
Henry Clay Lukens 



MY BLIND CANARY. 

IJWEET singer to my dreams, 
My blind canary, 



I dwell upon the liquid note 

That fills thy little breast and throat. 

And comes forth piping, full and airy, 
Reaching far and far away, 
To some dreamy, twilight day. 

Whose virgin star with softness beams 

On fairy dell and fairy. 

When night kneels down before the West 
In silent prayer, 
That, till the morn unveils her eye, 
In tranquil sleep the world shall lie, 

And serf and king like blessings share ; 
'Tis then thy voice in music falls 
Along my heart's deserted halls. 

Whose mould'ring rafters find their guest 
Too sweet to bear. 



MV BLIND CANARY. 

Who made thy song so all divine, 
My blind canary ? 
Who taught thy little tongue to sing ? 
Who gave thy voice a heavenly ring ? 

How learnedst thou thus sweetly to vary 
The long vibrations of thy muse, 
And o'er high angels to diffuse 

A lay too fine for hearts like mine. 
So sad and weary ? 

What dark-wing'd fate close-sealed thine eyes,. 
My soul's enchanter ? 
A fate, may be, of high decree 
Ordained this world thou shouldst not see. 

Or that our life's a cheat and banter. 
The heart's deep wrong, the maiden's tear, 
The pain, the strife, suspense and fear ; — 
Our woes to know thou art too wise. 
Sweet heaven haunter. 

Dost sing the joys of warmer climes, 
My little stranger ? 



MV BLIND CANARY. 

Those changeless green Canary Isles, 
Where ever long the summer smiles 
On tamarin and forest ranger ? 
On those green isles, lapped by the sea, 
Perennial blooms thy parent tree. 

Far from man's sins, far from his crimes, 
And far from danger. 

How cam'st thou from thy sunny isles, 
In cold to wander ? 
As poets from the heavens are flung 
Mean mortals of this earth among, 

For bread to sing and starve, and pander. 
Thou minstrel of the stately palms. 
In frosty climes dost sing for alms, 

Where man beguiles with heartless wiles, 
Deceit and slander. 

The yucca and the citron tree 

Thou knowest no more ; 
The guavas sweet and mangosteen 
Will never more by thee be seen ; 

Thy treble note no more will pour 



3fy BLIND CANARY. 

O'er mango, palm and asphodel, 
And pomegranate, and aureate bell ; 
No more, my bird, thy vision's free 
To see thy native shore. 

There is a morn of brighter beams 
Thine eyes beneath, 
Than ever shone to mortal view, 
Or fancy's painting ever drew ; 

Thy downy form is but the sheath, 
And music, flashing on its throne 
Of paradise and burnished zone. 

Thy world illumes, and incense teems 
On thy laurel wreath. 

When low the plume of awful Death 
In dusk descends 
Upon the couch where life is run, 
And cold oblivion's night begun, 

Ere yet the soul its casement rends, 
The lights of heaven pass in review, 
And waning hopes their pulse renew : 



MY BLIND CANARY. 

Such scenes are thine, to which thy breath 
Its sweetness lends. 

! minstrel of the mystic trill, 
And rhyme elastic ! 

There is a singer in my breast 
That rises to thy vocal crest. 

Though long her lute has lain monastic ; 
Thy dulcet notes with thee she'd share, 
But since thy song's untinged with care, 
She stoops, and droops, and wanders still 

Amid her dreams dynastic. 

1 dwell in space and nothingness ; 
With thee I'd soar ! 

I live in echoes of the past, 

Which from the grave are to me cast, 

Like phantoms on the midnight shore. 
When hope would come, a weight is here, 
Which crushes pride and lightens fear ; 
For hope's misgivings bring distress 
None can explore. 



J\'IY BLIND CANARY. 

To thy far heights with thee I'd rise, 
With soul unchained ; 
To that domain beyond the sky, 
Beyond the clouds that on me lie, 

Beyond what thought has e'er attained. 
O ! there falls a sheen of golden light. 
Chasing away the pensive night ; 
It blends with rays of milder glow, 
And bears me from this world below, 
Till faith 's maintained. 



LAST UPON THE ROLL. 

I. 

HE sits at the open window, on a calm Septem- 
ber day, 
And out on the mead before her she watches the 

girls at play ; 
A gentle breeze blows on her face and kisses her 

locks of snow. 
And she thinks of the days when she was young, 
seventy years ago. 

II. 

The fields are green as they were then, and the big 

old rocks as gray, 
The land and sky are as fair to see, the sun has as 

mild a ray ; 
The drowsy kine rest on the hill, the sheep skip to 

and fro, 
Just as they did when she was young, seventy years 

ago. 

7 



8 LAST UPON THE ROLL. 

III. 
The milkmaid tugs her foaming pail with ruddy 

strength and will, 
The cowboy, in his graceless garb, kicks dogs to 

keep them still ; 
The housewife bird chirps round the eaves and 

scolds her truant mate. 
Who dives to the ground and quick returns, bearing 

a tiny bait. 

IV. 

The sturdy youth, with dancing eyes and the vigor 
of lusty veins. 

Jumps on the colt and o'er the fence, to show no 
fear restrains ; 

Full well he knows that a neighbor's rose, is watch- 
ing behind a tree. 

And her maiden pride, at love's full tide, follows 
him over the lea. 

V. 

The lowly cot, the mansion high, cover hill and 
dale the same, 

And wealth's the pride of old and young, and pov- 
erty the shame ; 



LAST UPON THE ROLL. 9« 

And the bright blue eye of the cottage maid is cast 

demurely down, 
As she bends before a sister proud, who wears a 

silken gown. 

VI. 

The tawny west falls on the mead, and the children 

homeward fly, 
For now they see the whizzing bat, and hear the 

screech-owl's cry ; 
The jumping curls strike rosy cheeks, and fear 

with laughter peals, 
For each one knows, as she whirling goes, there's a 

goblin at her heels. 

VII. 

Down on the pines, with their haunted heads, the 

ghosts of evening fall. 
And the phantom touch of a dream too much on 

the quick'ning pulses pall ; 
For invisible visible sights are there, seen by fear 

alone. 
And, as round they fly, they cheat the eye, and down 

on the heart lie prone. 



TO LAST UPON THE ROLL. 

vni. 
She looks at her shrivelled fingers, and she smoothes 

her wrinkled hand, 
And the old, old love comes back to her, as she 

studies the golden band ; 
That dear old ring is loose and thin since first he 

placed it there. 
And at love's shrine, he said, " Be mine," and knelt 

with her in prayer. 

IX. 

Eighty years of joys and tears through time's sad 

chambers moan, 
-And still she hears in memory's ears a once familiar 

tone ; 
In long, sweet notes to her it floats, and it tells of 

the olden time, 
When love was strong, and life a song, and hope 

was in its prime. 

X, 

A little beyond the playground, on the slope of yon- 
der hill, 

Her dim eyes mark the gravestones where those she 
loved lie still ; 



LAST UPON THE ROLL. II 

And her thoughts have silent nursing, and her soul 

a silent grief, 
But her tear is the bier on which her sorrow 

finds relief. 

XI. 

Now her heart 's as light as the morning, with wings 

of a soul made free, 
And away, away to the tender loves she is all love to 

flee; 
And the God she adores so humbly, and the Christ 

she loves so well, 
Will take her soon to the waiting ones, beyond life's 

weary spell. 

XII. 

And her staff is lifted slowly, and she moves around 

with care, 
For her darlings now are sleeping — she might wake 

them unaware : 
And she gropes around to find them, and to bless 

them in her soul, 
When a whisper comes — " We wait, mother : you are 

last upon the roll." 



WHEN MY DAYS WERE YOUNG AND 
FAIR. 



not sing that song again, 
For it fills my heart with pain; 
I am bending to the blast, 
And it tells me of the past, 

Of the years of long ago, 
When my days were young and fair, 
And my heart as light as air ; 
When one feeling filled the breast, 
And one image gave it rest, 

In the long, long ago. 



Do not sing that song again, 
I have lived my years in vain, 
And my hair is thin and gray, 
And I'm passing fast away; 

12 



WHEN MY DA YS WERE YOUNG, ETC. 1 3 

On the dark and downward streams 
I'm a wreck of idle dreams, 
And it puts me on the rack 
At the weary looking back, 
At the ebb and at the flow, 
In the long, long ago. 

Do not sing that song again. 
There's a tear in its refrain ; 
It brings sadly back the time 
When my manhood felt its prime, 
When the comrades, dear and true, 
Closer, warmer, fonder grew. 
In the hour of friendship's proof, 
When the false ones stood aloof. 
And their friendship was but show, 
In the long, long ago. 

Do not sing that song again, 
It distracts my weary brain ; 
Ah ! too well, alas ! I know 
It is time for me to go. 



14 WHEN MY DAYS WERE YOUNG, ETC, 

And to leave to younger eyes 
The mild mystery of the skies, 
And this mighty world I tread, 
And the grander age ahead. 

There's a mist upon the river, 

And there's bleakness on the shore. 

And in dreams I pass forever, 
While sad music wafts me o'er. 



THE RIVER OF TIME. 



OiME, fill me a glass from the River of Time, 

I A bright flowing bumper, fill it high to the 

brim, 

'Till I drink to the friends who passed in their 

prime, 

'Till I drink to their shadows, fantastic and grim. 

What is life, what is death on the River of Time, 

But a ray on a rose, then a puff of the air, 
Which wafts the soul's fragrance to a kingdom sub- 
lime. 
Far away from men's treason, life's torment and 
care. 

Let me quaff to the bower where my dream-love 
began. 
In the far by-gone days of gladness and glee, 
When my boat, with my joy, on Time's River ran, 
With the breeze for her sail, loud laughing and. 
free. 

15 



l6 THE RIVER OF TIME. 

Farewell to those days when the heart was still 
young, 
And I danced in the dreamlight of Hope's morn- 
ing star ; 
Farewell to the days when my free footsteps sprung 
Over mountain and valley, o'er streamlet and 
bar. 

In the sunbeams I played, while their glories be- 
guiled, 
And the smile of love's eye was the gem of my 
soul ; 
-And I sailed on that stream with the pride of a 
child, 
Whose rosebud of joy is a paradise whole. 

Oh, never again shall one moment return. 

With its morning of hope, and its garland of 
spring, 
Jor deep down in the heart the embers that burn 
Round the dreams of my youth to cerements 
cling. 



THE RIVER OF TIME. 1 7 

With the seasons that come, and the seasons that go, 
As he counts the far years ere his manhood is born, 

Youth's patience is long, and his biding is slow. 
And old Time's rolling river is compassed with 
scorn. 

With the sunsets that fade, and the twilights that 
fall, 
As he numbers the days, swift-wing'd in their 
flight. 
Ere he lays aside care at the Death-Angel's call, 
Age turns to the past with a far-fading sight ; 

" Where is genius?" he asks; "where is talent's re- 
ward ? " 

And he fixes his gaze on the River of Time ; 
^' It is ground underfoot by a cold-hearted horde. 

The noisy in brass, and the cringers to crime." 

And the river flows on, as I stand on its brink. 
And the friends of a day pass by on the tide ; 

And the good and the true undeservedly sink. 
And the bad and the bold undeservedlv ride. 



BELCHER AND HIS LAMBS. 

I. 

'LL hie to church, with Belcher's lambs I 'It 
pray, 

And smile good-natured at the merry play. 
The deacon moves before the saintly door. 
Bows in the wealthy, and bows out the poor. 
Down proud broad aisles pass saints of every mold,. 
The ogling, jealous, and the saints who scold, 
The saints for sale, the saints who have been sold ; 
The painted saints, with curls to order made ; 
The saints of hat and plume and rich brocade ; 
riie merchant saints, whose diamonds shine afar. 
On fingers cleanly scrubbed of pitch and tar ; 
The premium saint, whose pew we closely scan, 
As round the whisper goes that "he 's the man ;" 
The saint who grunts, and, with a solid launch, 
Down bears his seat, and forth distends his paunch.. 
Wipes from his brow big drops of smoking dew, 
Then puffs and swells, as barley malt doth brew ; 
iS 



BELCHER AND HIS LAMBS. 1 9 

The saint of musk, whose 'kerchief scents the air ; 
The hoary saint, who dyes his grizzly hair ; 
The saint who glveth, as the plate goes round, 
To heaven a gift, of which he robbed the town. 

II. 

On yon plump form, bedecked with flowing hair, 

All eyes are fixed with most punctilious care. 

As o'er his chest his arms conversely slip, 

A studied gesture waits upon his lip. 

He bends, he shakes — a word, a toss, a bow ; 

Ye saints, be still — there 's storm on Belcher'ii 

brow. 
His theme is virtue, and demands his rage. 
Like Vengeance strutting on the mimic stage ; 
He kicks, he stamps, he lashes to and fro. 
And with his cant at reason strikes a blow ; 
Back casts his hair, like Sappho ere the plunge, 
And makes at mouths agape a forward lunge ; 
In his great bosom lodge all nature's charms, 
Involving love 'twixt generous lips and arms. 



PHRENKEPHALE. 

IROUD and plump o'er many a bump 
Of that phrenologic lump 



Which, in nature's perfect plan, 
The full compass bears to man, 
Sits a bird with haughty crest. 
Mother to her tender nest. 
Feeding broods of hungry throats, 
Which fly open when she floats 
To the rosy, smiling sky 
Of imagination high. 

Looking from the tallest tree 
Of the mental sphere, I see 
Birds, of various flecks and dyes, 
Round their nidus tilt and rise ; 
Birds, with gorgeous plumage spread, 
Ribbed with rays from tail to head. 

Fair 's the surplice of the dove, 
Circling near her organ Fove, 
20 



PHKENKEPHA LE. 2 1 

Nourishing her happy nest 
At the lover's throbbing breast : 
Darting rays from eye to eye, 
That are nimbused with a sigh, 
Which o'er the tide of lovers roll, 
And fill love's canvas of the soul. 

Raving in his frantic fits, 

O'er the nest of Fury flits 

The falcon, with his talons strong, 

Thrilled with the melody of wrong. 

With red battle in his eye, 

And a wild, sulphuric cry. 

O'er the empire of the brain 

Terribly he holds his reign. 

Till the frenzy of despair 

Claims him as its dying heir. 

High on the organ Self-Conceit 
The peacock spreads his ample sheet 
Of flowing tail and glowing spots. 
And pride, which dazzles while it rots ; 



22 PHJiENKEPHALE. 

His stomach feeds on feathered thought, 
By small-eyed folly moused and caught, 
Till down the warping of its nose 
Offensive to good taste it flows. 
— To jackanape 't would be no boon 
To raise the hand and pluck the moon, 
And plant it, with an unctuous vow, 
A diadem on his brazen brow. 

On the nest of gibble-gabble 

Clacks the magpie's foolish babble. 

How she sets the mental air 

Madly moving through the hair, 

At her chatter-chitter-chatter. 

At her polylogy clatter. 

Till, at last, her thievish tongue. 

Plundering the acoustic lung, 

Clouds the power of peaceful thought, 

And dies unteaching and untaught. 

On bump Wisdom sits the owl, 
In his sober, monkish cowl, 



niRENKEPIIALE. 

With deep eyes as wide as thought, 
Long by problems overwrought. 
In his jole and curving beak 
Grasps of wisdom silence speak, — 
Wisdom deep, which seems to dwell 
On the doubts that measure hell ; 
Wisdom cold, whicli seems to say, 
" Peace for man is far away." 

O'er the poet's dome of Wit 

Sings the mavis minims fit. 

Soaring, as she thrills her song, 

High above the ravished throng. 

— O magnet music of the soul ! 

What gods thy seraph breath control ! 
Thine eye is like a spirit star, 

Which leads me to the realms afar. 

Sailing on celestial seas, 

Wafted by celestial breeze ! 

Thy brow 's a cadence browsed on dew 

Of long, sweet echoes, rolling through 

That vale of bliss where soul and mind 

Are peopled with their spirit kind. 



24 PHRENKEPHALE. 

Thy face is like the rose's art, 
Which sheds its essence from the heart ; 
As one by one the rose-leaves fall, 
The last is sweetest of them all ; 
As one by one the sweet notes die. 
The last brings forth our dearest sigh. 



THERE 'S NO WIFE LIKE MY WIFE. 



HE morning sun is breaking, 
The gorgeous East is waking, 



And one, in all her splendor. 
With whispers that are tender. 
Angelic love is breathing, 
Angelic life is wreathing, 
About my heart so nearly, 
About my soul so dearly. 
Enchanted with my pleasure, 
I sing, in joyous measure — 

There 's no wife like my wife, 
There 's no wife like my wife, 
There is no wife like mine. 

Her rosy lip is luscious. 
Her song is like the thrush's, 
Her laughing dimples cover 
The glory of her lover, 
25 



26 THERE 'S NO WIFE LIKE MY WIFE. 

Like the maiden wave of Summer, 
Whose blue lips overcome her, 
The lambent circumfusion 
Of Lena's charm'd illusion 
About me floats so airy, 
It half conceals my fairy. 

There 's no wife like my wife, 
There 's no wife like my wife, 
There is no wife like mine. 

O the frolic of her tresses ! 

And her rollicking caresses ! 

And the beaming and the gleaming, 

And the glory o'er her streaming ! 

So deft and coy her pat is. 

So debonair her chat is, 

Her blooming grace illumes me. 

And heaven's love consumes me. 

There 's no wife like my wife, 
There 's no wife like my wife. 
There is no wife like mine. 



THE PILOT. 

ROM yonder ledge to yonder shore, 
Across the river's pulsing tide, 
The pilot, skilled in nautic lore, 

Revolves his wheel from side to side. 

In silent ways he wins his bays, 

His mold is strong, his face is dun. 

Bronzed by the kissing, amorous rays. 
Blown from the nostrils of the sun. 

When Night's brown hand uncoils her hair, 
And spreads it o'er the waters blue, 

The pilot's eye she fires with care. 
And binds his breast to duty true. 

The lazy fog is dimly starred 

With balls of red and blue and green, 

And screaming whistles startling guard 
A passage felt, but all unseen. 



28 THE PILOT. 

All groping through the masking mist, 
The steamboats near, like pressing sin. 

And cling to souls that would exist, 
One day, one hour of life to win. 

The life that fills the pilot's hand 

Responds to hearts with bated breath, 

While faith ascends to his command. 
And doffs its phantom raiment, death. 



CONTEMPLATION. 



MM 



HE bright waves leap 
Across the steep, 



And in the deep are lost forever ; 

If I must sing, 

My hopes take wing 
Through shades of gloom, returning never. 

Oh soul opprest I 

Where is that rest 
For which I crave, and pine, and sorrow ? 

Where is that beam 

That, in a dream, 
Forever shines but for.. to-morrow? 

The fiends of air 

And spectres bare 
Lay cold and withered hands upon me ; 

And joy's sweet sound 

Goes round and round. 
Beyond my reach, to mock and shun me. 
29 



CON TEMP LA TION. 

Does my God know 

The weight of woe 
I daily, hourly suffer under ? 

Are hearts opprest 

Ne'er to be blest 
Till every chord is rent asunder ? 

This cold, sad earth 

Gave me not birth. 
For all around is strange and gloomy ; 

The eyes I meet 

I fear to greet, 
For in the air there's danger to me. 

The words of men 

Affright me when 
In moods my spirit soars above me, 

And oft I try 

To crush a sigh 
For those I love — for those that love me. 

From main to main 
The world's wild strain 
Is painful to my wakeful senses ; 



CON TEMP LA TIOX. 

And in my blood 
There is a flood 
That down would sweep on man's offenses. 

My star is set, 

My eyelids wet ; 
Upon me falls the night eternal ; 

My struggling breath, 

Half born of death. 
The soul would free from chains infernal. 

Oh star of night ! 

Why shine so bright, 
Since far I am from thy proud splendor } 

Why mock my gloom, 

My living tomb. 
With dreams that die in doubt and wonder ? 

Do thy pure beams, 
That fill my dreams, 
And lead me up to realms supernal^ 



CONTEMPLA TIO/V. 

Do they, O star, 
Shoot wide and far 
Into all space that is nocturnal ? 

Far, far away, 

On tombstones gray, 
Oblivion drear thy light creeps over; 

Dark, sad and prone, 

Crushed, bound, alone. 
Around thee still my soul must hover. 

My thoughts I turn 

To thoughts that burn 
And tremble and glow, to seize the proof 

And reason why 

I live to die; 
But reason and proof stand far aloof. 

I move along 
With life's dull throng, 
Wrapt in the mysteries of the world ; 



CON TEMP LA TION. 3 3 

The more I climb 
To realms sublime, 
My soul from heaven is deeper hurled. 

In souls a-lull, 

The light burns dull, 
Nor fires consume the peaceful breast ; 

But thoughts at strife 

With this dark life 
Supply the flames that never rest. 

I turn the eye. 

And wonder why 
Cities are built and toil is endless ; 

I look aghast 

At swift years past : 
Cities are dead, and graves are friendless. 

Oh weary soul ! 
Where is the goal 
For which you long and pine and sorrow } 



34 CON TEMP LA TIOiV. 

Where is the star 
That shines afar, 
And cheats you ever in the morrow ? 

If man is born 
This world to scorn, 

And still to give the senses ease, 
Some sphere above, 
Some realm of love, 

Must all his hopes at last appease. 



THE COBBLER. 

IN cellar close and drear and dark 
I Beneath the sidewalk low, 
I see the cobbler's busy hands, 

I see his steady blow. 
His body's bent upon his last, 
His lamp hangs on the wall, 
And in and out he whips his ends, 
And plies his nimble awl. 
Tip tap, from sun to sun, 
Tip tap, the night's begun. 
And he has work that must be done, 
Tip tap. 

His apron 's spread across his breast, 

Of leathern texture strons: : 
His arms are bare, his sleeves rolled up ; 

His feet brace tight the thong, 

35 



^6 THE COBBLER. 

Which binds the last between his knees ; 

His pull is swift and long ; 
And now the pegs he hammers in, 
Humming a little song; 
Tip tap, from sun to sun. 
Tip tap, the night's begun, 
And he has work that must be done, 
Tip tap. 

For evening chat, a crony plods 

Adown the creaking stair ; 
He naively cracks a rustic joke, 

And forward draws his chair. 
At wit the cobbler tries his skill, 

The friendly joke to floor; 
In sounding words he makes retort, 

And both in chorus roar. 

The current news is now discussed — 
What men have said or done ; 

And how they erred in this or that, 
And where thev honor won. 



THE COBBLER. 37 

(The best and fairest he will be, 

Of whom it can be said : 
He worked to give a f^Uow-man 

A way to earn his bread. 
Much closer to the human breast 

Than all of glory's store, 
Will be the simple words : " He found 

Employment for the poor.") 



With elbows placed upon his knees, 

And fingers raised to show 
The nice deductions of his mind, 

The cobbler's reasons flow ; 
And then he pegs and pegs away. 
He knows the minutes speed ; 
His work's behind the promised time, 
And he has mouths to feed. 
Tip tap, from sun to sun, 
Tip tap, the night's begun. 
And he has work that must be done, 
Tip tap. 



38 THE COBBLER. 

Now sound befogs the lines of sense, 

And, full of wisdom's pride. 
On reason's back he rolls a weight, 

Which reason will not ride ; 
But down all in the dust she lies, 

Dust of an empty head, 
And kicks her heels against his tongue, 

'Till his kind face is red. 

Feeling a pain that he has erred. 

He stops where pride begins, 
And, holding out his manly hand, 

He shows how goodness wins ; 
The palms are joined in kindly grasp, 

Contending words are o'er. 
And in that lock of cordial love. 

True friendship they restore. 

Now, fumbling through his kit, he finds 

That solace to his care — 
That balm between two cronies dear — 

The pipe, which both may share 



THE COBBLER. 39 

The smoke now curls above his head, 

From smacks both loud and full ; 
Then with his thumb the shank he wipes, 
- With " Jim, now, take a pull." 

He nods with pleasure to the wall, 

Where mended boots are hung ; 
He points to those that great men own, 

Whose fame has long been sung. 
To vamp the boot that honor wears 

Is fame enough for him ; 
■Content is he to labor on, 

Until his eyes grow dim. 

Despise him not, ye rich and vain ; 

He has a father's care : 
His boys and girls to clothe and feed, 

A wife his bread to share. 
Beneath his rough and homely garb, 

A manly heart and true 
Beats warm with all a father's love, 

And all that love can do. 



40 THE COBBLER. 

The pride of wealth is not for him, 

Still less the pride of fame ; 
They are the thieves that rob the heart, 

To gain an empty name. 
With sky above and earth beneath, 

His Eden floats between ; 
And life is bliss, when pride and state 

Are not with envy seen. 

Some day, ere yet the sun is up, 

Or ere the sun goes down, 
•The crape will hang upon his door. 

Unnoticed by the town. 
Like shadows will his patrons pass. 

And turn their gaze away, 
For friendship dies between our sighs^ 

When friends return to clay. 

Eternity shall guard his dust 
When monuments shall fall, 

And clouds, the breathing of the moon,. 
Shall myriad time recall. 



THE COBBLER. 4I 

A man was he of artless ways, 

To Nature always true ; 
He ne'er assumed what he was not, 

But lived for what he knew. 



SONG OF THE STORM KING. 

LOW, ye winds ! 
Blow and whistle ! Whistle and blow ! 



There are devils above and devils below ! 
And I'm King of the Furies wherever I go. 

From a little white puff of an argent cloud, 
In the summer I spread to a streaming shroud ; 
From a small, dark spot on the horizon's verge, 
In winter I rise to a national dirge. 
I stand on the wreck of the mariner's deck. 
And I toss to the waves, at the north wind's beck. 
The hopes of a voyage from far off lands. 
The wails and the woes and the ^ringing hands ; 
The babe at the breast and the piercing shriek 
Of a wild, mad mother, with stony cheek, 
The father, whom time has bent with care, 
The lovers, whose hopes were all too fair, 
42 



SONG OF THE STORM KING. 43 

I hurl them away on the billows' foam ; 
I leave them to Fate, and again I roam. 
Oh, blow, ye winds ! 
Blow and whistle ! Whistle and blow ! 
There are demons above and demons below ! 
And I'm King of the Furies wherever I go. 

I pluck the trees from their steadfast roots, 
And fling to the gale the boughs and shoots ; 
I fill the rivers with rushing floods, 
And with spectres fierce I crowd the woods : 
They are groves cast out on the turbulent air, 
And they feed on the wretches of mad despair; 
The steeples I throw from castle and fane, 
And laugh at their work who raise them again. 
Blow, blow, ye winds ! 
Blow and whistle ! Whistle and blow ! 
There are demons above and demons below ! 
And Fm King of the Furies wherever I go. 

On my feet are pinions that pull the hills, 
And the ropes are black with menacing ills. 



44 SONG OF THE STORM KING. 

That against the peace of the stars rebel, 
And carry from heaven the woes of hell. 
My beard is made of the terrors wild 
Of houseless mother and freezing child, 
I rush over towns with a swoop and a roar. 
On hovel and castle my vengeance I pour ; 
I knock over chimneys and houses unroof, 
And laugh at the curses I get in reproof. 
Blow, blow, ye winds ! 
Blow and whistle ! Whistle and blow ! 
There are demons above and demons below ! 
And I'm Kins; of the Furies wherever I go. 



The monarch austere, who sits on his throne, 
With terror I shake till I make him groan ; 
All his squadrons of war that ride on the wave 
I send with a blast to a bottomless grave. 
I ravage the palace that stands in my path, 
And his kingdom I sweep with the hurricane's wrath. 
With woe in my eye and black fiends in my blood, 
I rush upon all with a pitiless flood. 



SONG OF THE STORM KING. 45 

I seize on the graves, and the coffins up-pull, 
And toss to the tempest the death-eaten skull. 
The head that to none but its maker would bend, 
The limbs that no longer can stand and defend, 
The lips that had scoffed at the meek of the earth, 
The eyes that once rolled in the pride of high birth, 
The brow that had wounded sad hearts by its frown, 
And by infamous ways had sought for renown : — 
All, all are swept down in the torrent and gale, 
And naught's left behind save a dead echo's wail. 
Then blow, ye winds ! 
Blow and whistle ! Whistle and blow ! 
There are devils above and devils below ! 
And I'm King of the Furies wherever I go. 



Wild beasts of the forest I drive in my flight ; 
The tiger and leopard they skulk from my sight ; 
The viper and vulture seek shade from the blast — 
There's naught save the eagle that's game to the last. 
When armies are marshalled in battle array, 
One spurt from my charger will set them at bay. 



4.6 SONG OF THE STORM KING. 

I am foe to the earth and foe to the sun, 

And from mountaui to sea in madness I run. 

Sad havoc I make on the hill and the plain, 

And I throw from the track the steam-rushing train ; 

The maimed and the mangled I leave to their woe, 

While upward and downward and onward I go. 

Through palace and cottage and lady's boudoir, 

I rattle and battle and dismally roar. 

Oh, blow, ye winds ! 

Blow and whistle ! Whistle and blow ! 

There are goblins above and goblins below ! 

And I'm King of the Furies wherever I go. 



A FRAGMENT 



WAS near the banks of the Ohio, 



f^.PJI Many long years and years ago^ 
Sol Clifford lived in all the state 
Of peerless prince or potentate. 
From where the Zahir ebbs and flows, 
And torrid heat forever glows, 
His slaves — sad mortals, all untaught — 
To his fair fields bold Clifford brought. 
Unroofed of friend, and nil of name, 
A sad-eyed mute among them came. 
That she was dumb the mistress kind 
Her infant's charge to her assigned, 
And told her how, from day to day. 
Around the lawn she 'd take her way. 
And when the sun's delirium heat, 
Down from its throne might fiercely beat,.. 
She'd seek the cooling, leafy shade, 
Along the mossy, gentle glade, 
And there, with bird and bloom, employ 
The pleasure of her cherished boy. 
47 



48 A FEAGlMENT. 

It was a winsome sight to see, 

In balmy eve upon the lea, 

The tender black, of massive mold, 

The tender white to her enfold : 

To watch the child's soft serious eyes 

Gaze on his nurse with large surprise, 

Half-liking this, rejecting that, 

With pull and haul and giddy pat ; 

And when in sport her head threw back. 

Her nose he 'd seize with childish knack. 

And as his grasping strength he wields. 

His unctuous grip to laughter yields ; 

And now his pudgy fingers slip 

Over her rolling, red-brown lip ; 

At these she bites, with features sour, 

As if all anxious to devour, 

Between the music of her coo, 

The tips she nips and kisses too. 

The sail that sped across the wave 
From Zahir's banks to Freedom's grave, 
Conveyed to old Kentucky's shore 
A fetich priest with fetid lore. 



A FRAGMENT. 49 

O'er yonder hill, through yonder pine, 
Is seen the hoped-for day's decline. 
'T is now the hour to fetich rites 
The fetich priest his fold invites. 
With oil of toad and serpent greased. 
His limbs are ready for the feast : 
Around his brow a withered snake, 
And in his hand a rancid hake, 
And on his bosom, bare and black, 
Filled with charms, an adder's sack ; 
And from his ears, projecting out, 
A weasel's eye and fox's snout ; 
And on each arm a lizard's head. 
And on his feet two wagtails dead, 
And round his legs, from heels to knees, 
Corroded forks, and knives, and keys ; 
And at his loins the paws of bear. 
And dead mice matted in his hair. 

He leads the herd with solemn brow, 
Then slowly turns and makes his bow, 
And tosses on his lifted arm 
A mighty and mysterious charm. 



50 A FRAGMENT. 

The eager tyros know the sign, 

And round the caldron rush in line ; 

With one leg up and one leg down, 

They sing and dance, and shout and frown ; 

The caldron boils with mystic rites 

Of superstitious appetites. 

Twanging, clanging, around they trot, 

And fling their sorcery in the pot. 

As higher swells the caldron's flame. 

The frantic serfs cast off their shame ; 

Their hot spurs snatching from the fire, 

They goad the colt of mad desire ; 

They shout and scream, hands round they clap^ 

Their tattered raiment rend and snap, 

And to the blaze, which wider spreads, 

They fling their flitters and their shreds, 

Till male and female, madly rude, 

From head to foot are beastly nude. 

From back to back they spring and leap. 

And tumble, totter in a heap ; 

They scream, they bite, they maul and yell^ 

Like furies spewed from frightened hell. 



A FRAGMENT. 5 I 

Now, why this stare and sharp surprise, 

Which seize upon their savage eyes ? 

An ebon cloud, with rosy star. 

Their swinish revel comes to mar. 

Night's robe is rent with curse and hoot, 

For yonder walks the hated mute. 

Whose envied ease and smiling boy 

The seething bedlam herd annoy. 

On passion's brink their force they wage, 

And lash, in headlong craze, their rage ; 

Their fiendish hearts and hands are wild 

To quench the mute and seize the child, 

And to the caldron's flame consign 

The sole, sweet heir of Clifford's line. 

It is a moment all supreme 

A dawning truth to couch a dream. 
******** 

Over the wall, across the mead, 

The bloodhound strains with pressing speed. 

Now quickly here, now quickly there, 

He scents the ground, he scents the air ; 

In a loose web of hurry wound. 

His eager nose runs round and round. 



52 A FRAGMENT. 

The horn is blown, the bell is rung, 

And wailing grief o'er beauty 's flung. 

Now, spurred and saddled on his steed, 

Sol Clifford arrows hill and mead, 

Racked by the quivers of despair, 

AVhich drain his soul-love everywhere. 
******** 

The broadest sphere is narrow-faced, 

And the great world all tightly laced. 

Under the horror and surprise 

Which meet the awe-struck Clifford's eyes. 

His frenzy now would clutch the globe 

As lightly as his flowing robe ; 

For what is there, and what is here ? 

The bounding barb rebounds in fear ; 

The frightened eye and arching neck 

Tight reins demand to hold in check ; 

The nostril spread, the ramping mane. 

Express the courser's dread and pain. 

A moan is heard, — a troubled sigh : 
A glance, a flash from Clifford's eye : 
The mute and babe together lie. 



A FRAGMENT. 53 

All wakeful to their pain and pangs, 

The bloodhound, doused in gory fangs, 

Beside them crouched, with drowsy leer. 

But watchful and patrolling ear. 

The saddle 's empty, Clifford stands 

With his sweet boy in happy hands. 
******** 

Ah, smothered conscience, who can tell 

The slaves you've dragged from earth to hell ? 

The halo round accustomed crime 

Makes fools of saints, and knaves sublime. 



THAT OLD, OLD SIGN. 



n 



HERE it swings from the wall, 
At the old tavern hall, 
That old, old sign ; 
There it swings in the blast. 
With its memories of the past, 
When my locks, a vesper brown, 
Won the love-sighs of the town. 
And the friendship of my youth 
Was the fountain-head of truth. 

Five-and-twenty years ago, 
Ere my head was capped with snow, 
And the crow's-foot round my eyes 
Made me time and age despise, 
Wings of pleasure bore my flight 
On the roving winds of night, 
To the friends who loved me well, 
To the tales we loved to tell. 
54 



THAT OLD, OLD SIGN. 55 

That old, old sign, 
With its glass of ruby wine ; 
There it swings from the wall. 
At the old tavern hall, — 
There it swings in the blast, 
In its shadows of the past. 
Moaning at my gaze beneath, 
Like a crone that 's lost her teeth, 
Asking of the weary wind 
If old comrades it can find. 

Uut the wind it murmurs low : 
"After summer comes the snow, 
After pleasure comes the pain : 
Pleasures past ne'er come again." 



LOVE WITHOUT THE LOVER. 

E comes across the daisies, 
Their bloom is on his cheek ; 
He comes across the daisies, 
With glances mild and meek. 

A sweet and gentle maiden, 
With face all bright and fair, 

Beneath the blossoms laden, 
Is waiting for him there. 

But angels see their meeting. 

But angels should be near, 
To fill the air with greeting 

At love so fond and dear. 

Beneath the blossoms laden 
With joy they sit them down, 

The lover and the maiden. 
All in the evening brown. 

56 



LOVE WITHOUT THE LOVER. 57 

They pledge their love forever, 

And call on Heaven to see 
That naught but death shall sever 

Two hearts so young and free. 

On dingle flits the fairy, 

On hillock falls the gloam. 
True signs to maiden wary 

There 's waiting love at home. 

"To-morrow he '11 be with me," 

She says in gleeful tone ; 
" To-morrow he '11 be with me. 

And the priest will make us one." 

To-morrow ! ah, to-morrow ! 

What hope is on thy wing ! 
What bitter, bitter sorrow 

Thy disappointments bring ! 

What news is this now brought her > 

What cruel tale is told ? 
But yesterday he sought her ; 

To-day he marries gold. 



58 LOVE WITHOUT THE LOVER. 

Her eyes are red with weeping, 
Her cheeks are blanched with care 

Her lily hands are creeping 
In anguish through her hair. 

Ah, love without the lover, 
What desolation's thine ! 

No hope can e'er discover 
For thee a true-love's shrine ! 

Ah, love without the lover ! 

Ah, sky without a star ! 
What gloomy shadows hover 

Along thy midnight bar ! 

Like sails upon the ocean 

No gentle breezes fill, 
The loving soul's emotion 

Abides without the will. 

Like mist upon the roses, 

When sunlight 's in the cloud, 

The broken heart reposes 

On love's unhallowed shroud. 



M,. 



THE VILLAGE CHURCH. 

ajHERE is a church in yonder vale, 
aj I feel its power divine ; 



It makes me strong, it makes me hale, 
It makes my doubts decline. 

That fane is white, its spire is bright, 
And points to Heaven above ; 

It fills me with Jehovah's light 
Of Peace, and Truth, and Love. 

O lovely spot ! O holy place ! 

That all my soul inspires 
To love my God, to seek His grace, 

To wake my pure desires. 

When heavy skies fill heavy hearts. 
And gloom surrounds the goal, 

'T is then sweet faith in Christ imparts 
Calm solace to the soul. 
59 



6o THE VILLAGE CHURCH. 

If wearily this earth I tread, 

Obedient to His will, 
When friends are fled, and dear ones dead, 

The Lord is with me still. 

The loved and good ne'er turn to earth ; 

In Heaven alone they bide ; 
In God's bright home they have new birth,. 

And life that's sanctified. 

Oh, shield me, Lord, from shame and sin, 

As guardest Thou yon vale. 
That I, in seeking Heaven to win. 

By no misfortune fail. 



EVERY MAN 'S A BROTHER MAN. 

ff^jVERY man 's a brother man, 
lll^al Why should brothers quarrel ? 
Be a brother to a brother : 
Let this be your moral. 

A helping hand to fellow-man 

All the world over ; 
A gentle word in heat of strife 

Makes a foe your lover. 

A fellow heart will move the soul, 

A fellow-love will guide it ; 
Since God 's creator of the whole, 

Oh, why is man divided ? 

If a brother's down the hill, 

Lend a hand to lift him ; 
Don't be sudden to condemn, 

And on shame to drift him. 
6i 



62 EVERY MAN 'S A BROTHER MAN. 

Be a brother to a brother ; 

Remember that to-morrow 
A narrow grave will close upon 

A life of pain and sorrow. 

In the wilderness of men, 

In the rush and render, 
In the bustle, in the strife, 

Hearts are true and tender. 

Love 's the jewel of this life ; 

Bad 's the heart without it : 
Pity — pity — pray for him 

Who would scoff or flout it. 

The virtue of a kindly act 

Is nobler far, believe me, 
Than all the laurels fame can win, 

Or fancy's fingers weave me. 

Should you envy wealth or state. 

Remember, oh, remember. 
That Christ our Lord was poor and cold,. 

As winds in bleak December. 



EVERY MAN 'S A BROTHER MAN. 63^. 

Folly is the want of thought, 

Anger that of reason ; 
They are fools that should be crushed 

In and out of season. 

Strife is seed that 's full of ill 

Wherever it is planted ; 
Peace and love is holy wine, 

From holy beaker granted. 

Every heart has care to bear, 

Every minute brings it ; 
Think of this before you speak. 

Before your folly wrings it. 

Every man since Adam's day, 

Has his singularity ; 
Human nature is but clay, 

Truly blest by charity. 

Life unseen 's the life of man, 

That 's the world we live in ;. 
What is, is not ; the future, all 

Love and be forgiven. 



64 EVERY MAN 'S A BROTHER MAN. 

A speck of dust upon the eye 
Shuts out the light of heaven ; 

A little stain upon the soul 
Reduces man to leaven. 

Be a brother to a brother, 
For the world is frowning 

On the man that stands aloof 

From bright friendship's crowning. 

Here 's a hand to every man, 

In whatever station ; 
Here 's a tear for every ill 

In this wide creation. 

God bless all ! 's the prayer of him 
Who weaves these little verses ; 

And blest he '11 be who frequently 
Their lesson well rehearses. 



A FEW BRIEF YEARS 



FEW brief years and I shall lie 
Beneath yon calm and peaceful sky, 
Whose breast is bright with notes and bars, 
And laughing music of the stars, — 
Whose bosom, spread from pole to pole, 
In silence will my grave console. 



With straightened limbs my shade will rest 
My head against my coffin pressed ; 
And hour by hour, and day by day, 
My vapored dust will pass away. 

This hand that writes will then be cold. 
And shrunk and eaten with the mold 
Of time and death and dark decay, 
Till joint by joint returns to clay. 

65 



66 A FEW BRIEF YEARS. 

The dread, the fear, the torment sore, 
Will rend my heart-strings never more,. 
Nor human wiles nor worldly strife, 
To barely win the bread of life, 
Will ne'er, within my narrow bed, 
Disturb or wake my wearied head. 

A thousand years will pass me by, 
Without a change in land or sky ; 
Nor winter's snow, nor summer's heat. 
Will e'er disturb my winding sheet. 

At evening's close I'll meet no more 
The smile that waits me at the door ; 
The hills and dales and streams will be 
A mute forevermore to me. 

No morn will wake me at its dawn ; 
No more, on mead or field or lawn. 
When landscapes smile beneath the sun,. 
Will romping childhood to me run. 



A FEW BRIEF YEARS. 6/ 

O happy day, these eyes will close 
To life's contentions and its woes, 
And all the miseries that ban 
The mystic course of foolish man! 

My span of life, my humble lot, 
Like friendship's vows, will be forgot ; 
And all the world will live the same 
As if I never had a name. 

Alas the dawn ! It leads to night. 
A moment's bloom : eternal blight ! 
All ends attained, ambition's goal 
Is but the sorrow of the soul. 



I SHALL WRAP ME IN DREAMS. 

SHALL wrap me in dreams of the sweetest 
and fairest, 

The brightest of darlings e'er seen on the earth ; 
I shall wrap me in dreams of the choicest and rarest — 
The rarest of beauties since beauty had birth. 

I shall toss on my couch until closely I hold her 
In the pride of my heart, in the joy of my breast ; 

Though her jewels and laces far from me infold her, 
All the night by my side my own darling shall 
rest. 

The cares of the day I shall leave for the morrow, 
And my thoughts in love's bosom shall calmly re- 
pose, 

While from me depart all the sin and the sorrow. 

Till my dreams are as sweet as the balm of the 

rose. 

68 



/ SHALL WRAP ME IN DREAMS. 69 

O, the soft down of love shall descend on my pil- 
low 

From planets of angels revolving on high ; 
And, soothing and full as the midsummer billow, 

Adored in my arms my sweet charmer shall lie. 

To my true love I'll whisper how fondly I love her, 
I'll prove it with kisses, caresses, and sighs ; 

O, there is not about her, beyond or above her, 
An angel of grace in affection so wise. 

O, there's no joy on earth so strongly abiding 
As dreams of my dear in the stillness of night ; 

O, there's naught to compare to love sweetly glid- 
ing 
From dreams into sleep in a glory of light. 

Through the night there's a seraph above my bed 
beaming, 
And she steals on my lips a kiss and a smile ; 
And I'm bound by the cords that are spun in my 
dreaming 
To an angel of truth in whom there's no guile. 



70 / SHALL WRAP ME IN DREAMS. 

And so let it be, at the fall of Life's curtain, 

When the last ray of light has fled from my mind, 

Though the hopes of my dreams proved always un- 
certain, 
The cords of my dreaming two spirits shall bind. 



THE DAY IS PAST. 

|^"^|HE day is past, the night is here, 
liS^l When friendship's tie we sever, 
And she we love shall disappear, 
Returning to us never. 

So runs the world, through weary years ; 

Ere yet our joys are spoken. 
The laughing eye is dimmed with tears, 

And tender links are broken. 

O sweetest mouth that e'er was made 

To kiss a parting lover, 
O fairest cheek that e'er was laid 

Upon a downy cover. 

My life you twine in love's embrace. 
Of freedom you deprive me, 

And as I dwell on every grace. 
To love's despair you drive me. 
71 



72 THE DAY IS PAST. 

Your spirit floats along the air, 
In sunny tides I find it; 

And when it fades, the world is bare 
To him it leaves behind it. 



IN YOUTH. 



N youth we rested on the hill of Hope, 
And viewed before us the prospective pleas- 
ure; 
We watched the warm East bathing vale and slope 
With rays downladen with their golden treasure. 

There came a shade that lent a tinge to sadness, 
Yet made the soul more spiritually bright ; 

She took my hand, and in a voice of gladness, 
Pointed to where a bird sailed in the light. 

With the swift waving wing that skimmed the air, 
Upward and onward my heart kept time and mo- 
tion. 
Until a cloud, with silvery lining fair, 

Concealed the bird, and blighted my devotion. 
73 



74 IN YOUTH. 

The noon approached, and with it worldly pain ; 
We labored in the vale, with burning rays above 
us; 
Slow moved the rook across our field of grain, 

And darkness seemed to fall on those who cared 
to love us. 

On the Western slope, in twilight now, 

We turn with sadness to the night behind us; 

The care of time is fixed on either brow. 

And sighs are born of thoughts that but remind us. 

The bird that sailed, at early summer morn, 
Behind the cloud with silvery lining fair. 

Was youth's bright hope, which fled from us with 
scorn. 
And left our days to darkness and despair. 

The rook that moved across our field of grain, 
Bore on his wings the blight of coming years; 

But still to me there's solace in her strain, 
Who raised me first to life among the spheres. 



MY SWEETHEART. 



i 



Y sweetheart died in springtime's morning, 
si When fields were fair with bahny weather ; 
When May her bosom was adorning 

With daisies sweet and blooming heather. 

On every bough a bird was singing : 
The silky sky uncoiled her tresses ; 

The blithesome lark was gayly winging 
A flight so bright no song expresses. 

My joy went out to greet the wooing 
Of gentle winds and laughing roses, 

Their fragrant kiss again renewing, 
Till summer's door the winter closes. 

No mate had I for love's caressing, 
No mate had I for love's embraces ; 

The gay-robed May wore heaven's blessing, 
Reflecting back my lost one's graces. 

75 



"](> MY SWEETHEART. 

The mead was green, the hills were rising 
In liquid air, which shone around them ; 

And Nature, in her nice devising, 

In gauze of dreamy pleasure bound them^ 

Then lightly stept, the green grass turning, 
A fond one, fled from me forever ; 

Then on the sward I traced, in mourning ; 
" The grave can never true love sever." 

In hallovved light I saw her kneeling, 

With pallid cheek and drooping lashes. . . 

Against a ray of old love's feeling 
The vision leaned and fell to ashes. 

My sweetheart died in springtime's morning. 
In all her fair and guileless beauty ; 

Loving her kind, no creature scorning, 
Her sweet, brief life was simple duty. 

Forever now a sad bird's singing 
Amid the willows of my sorrow ; 

And on my dreams the chime is ringing, 
" A better life will dawn to-morrow." 



OUR COUNTRY. 



m 



TERNAL empire of the world, 
The first that leads in Freedom's van, 
Thy Stars and Stripes shall float unfurl'd 
While God inspires the soul of man. 

Thy hills shall shake with Freedom's sound, 
Thy valleys quiver with the shock, 

And from the heavens it will rebound. 
Again to peal from dale to rock. 

The wild Atlantic leaps with pride, 
The calm Pacific rests in glory, 

The music of whose flowing tide 
Is sweetly tuned to Freedom's story. 

Like steel that binds the honored oak, 
That marks some spot with sacred care, 

Our country's love shall ward the stroke 
That would this hallowed Union share. 
77 



78 OUR COUNTRY. 

Oh, cherished land of holy fame ! 

No servile foe shall dare to tread, 
While breathes one breath in Freedom's name^ 

The sacred soil where martyrs bled. 

Through all the space of Freedom's span, 
Liberty knows but one degree — 

The noble, honored rank of man, 
A name debased save by the free. 



HOPE ON! HOPE EVER! 



IFT your head above your breast ! 
Plant your foot, and raise your chest I 
Do not show the chicken heart ! 
If a man, then bear your part ! 
You're not here to be a slave ! 
You're not liere to beg and crave! 
You were born to wear the crown 
Of proud manhood's just renown ! 
Hope on ! Hope ever ! 
Surrender never ! 

Should disasters, thick and fast, 
Strike your sail with every blast, 
Raise your banner, Faith and Will, 
And with Hope your canvas fill. 
Let your course be honest, true. 
And that bent to death pursue. 
79 



-8o HOPE ON! HOPE EVER! 

Never fear but, come what may, 
You will find the truth to pay. 
Press on ! Press ever ! 
Surrender never ! 

In your path let nothing stand ; 
Give the weak a helping hand ; 
He that's honored in this life, 
Aids a brother in the strife ; 
On the breeze it goes unfurl'd, 
One good deed will sway the world. 
It is noble, fit, and kind, 
Human woes to soothe and bind. 
Push on ! Push ever ! 
Surrender never ! 

You're a man of kingly height. 
When your course is in the right ; 
No man let, however great, 
To your manhood dare dictate. 
Only tyrants rule the slave ! 
Only God controls the brave! 



HOPE ON'! HOPE EVE PI 

Never can a despot rule 
In a land of Freedom's school ! 
Strive on ! Strive ever ! 
Surrender never ! 

From the soul to man's estate 
Stretch the links of human fate ; 
Let the soul with goodness flow, 
That the burnished links may glow, 
Till the mind is pure and bright 
With a love of truth and right ; 
Till the heart is beating strong, 
Crushing every human wrong. 
Hope on ! Hope ever ! 
Surrender never ! 



HOPE'S ROSE. 

jga'^I'LL make me a bed in a bunch of roses, 
1™™1 At the rivulet's feet, where the waters play ; 
And I'll lay me down where the balm reposes, 
From the shadows that followed me all the day. 

The dew on the vale is peacefully falling, 
And the sultry zephyrs in coolness rest : 

Long memory's roll, in its sad recalling. 
In a revery soothes my feverish breast. 

I pluck me a rose from those that I rest on, 
And far out on the stream I fling it away : 

The stream of my dreams my life is a jest on, 

Which rises and sinks, like yon rose on the spray. 

My hopes, as yon rose, were bright in their morning,. 

And high on the wave of ambition were thrown ; 
But now they return, no glory adorning, 

To tell me the rose of my morning is flown. 

82 



THERE IS A BRIGHT SPOT IN THE 
SKY. 






HE dream of years ofttimes betrays 
A golden grief over golden days — 
A grief which chants, on memory's shell, 
The requiem of a dead farewell ; 
But when its strains grow low and die, 
There is a bright spot in the sky. 

With all life's ills I am content, 
If well my days are daily spent. 
When phantoms from a distant land. 
Shall come and lead me by the hand, 
Resigned I'll go, without a sigh. 
For there's a bright spot in the sky. 

Should hearts grow cold and men forget 
The hand that placed them in its debt, 
Since error is the fate of all. 
And some will stand, while some will fall, 
83 



84 THERE IS A BRIGHT SPO T IN THE SKY. 

No man by me shall prostrate lie, 
While there's a bright spot in the sky. 

This world is good to him that lives 
Within the bounds that nature gives; 
But roses bloom and roses fade, 
And brightest jewels have their shade ; 
If gloom surround, then gaze on high. 
And find a bright spot in the sky. 

In every home let sunshine dwell, 

On every face let kindness tell, 

In every heart let peace find rest, 

And should pale sorrow wring the breast, 

Take courage then, and look on high ; 

There's still a bright spot in the sky. 

To other hearts and other hands, 
To other climes and other lands. 
The coast is dark along that main 
Whose pilgrims ne'er return again ; 
But in that long and last good-bye, 
A star will guide from sky to sky. 



IN YONDER VALE. 

N yonder vale there is a lowly mound, 
Where sleeps forever all I ever found, 
In this strange world of phantom and disguise, 
To give my soul a glimpse of Paradise. 

She came to me ere love was known to death, 
When joy expanded on the south wind's breath ; 
An angel of sweetness, strayed from Heaven's choir, 
To light my soul with love's divinest fire. 

I tire of love's graces now. She is dead; 

The air rests heavy on me as of lead ; 

Ere yet my days have reached their sunny prime, 

I totter on the crutch of crumbling time. 

When beauty roves along yon silent vale, 
And reads in flowers the gentle lover's tale, 
This low-pulsed music then will close around — 
Our deepest sorrow to dead love is bound. 

85 



AUTUMN LEAVES. 

lis now the hour when rays decline 
On withered leaf and broken vine, 



When birds fly homeward from the hill, 
And leaves drop darkly on the sill. 
O leaves, that vernal days recall, 
Why do you fall — why do you fall ? 

Across the woof of dusk and shade 

The tawny elves disport and fade : 

While whispers, swathed in love's command, 

Would lure me hence to fairy land. 

O leaves, that dear old friends recall, 

Why do you fall — why do you fall ? 

The moaning winds bring thoughts to me 

As lonely as the leafless tree ; 

Like autumn leaves, my day is passed, 

And pathless night is overcast. 

O leaves, that life's proud hopes recall, 

Why do you fall — why do you fall ? 
86 



AUTUMN- LEAVES. 8/ 

I know, alas ! — now that I'm old — 
To me the world is strange and cold. 
What by-gone joys it will renew 
To join my friends beyond the blue ! 
"O leaves, that bosom friends recall, 
Why do you fall — why do you fall ? 

Come, silent death, and take your fee, 

For it is something to be free — 

An element of sky and sea 

In boundless immortality. 

O leaves, that dreams of heaven recall, 

Why do you fall — why do you fall ? 

Ah, joys of youth and tears of age, 
There never yet was priest or sage 
That could return without regret 
To where his youth and manhood met. 
Shrines on my head the dead leaves fall, 
And my soul whispers : " God is all." 



TAKE BACK THE RING. 

I^'^IAKE back the ring thy finger wore,. 
W^^ It ne'er shall circle mine ; 
Take back the ring; I'll trust no more 
A heart so false as thine. 

The love which closed in blissful sleep, 
To dream of heaven and thee, 

Awakes to know, but not to weep, 
How false thy vows can be. 

No grief shall wring my trusting breast,. 

No pain my heart shall know ; 
In gentle peace my soul shall rest ; 

No tear for thee shall flow. 

The heart that wins a morning love, 

To evening loves incline ; 
As stars engage us from above. 

When meteors round us shin \ 



TAKE BACK THE RING. 

Fresh hopes to cheer, thy way is dear, 

'Tis lit with flick'ring joy ; 
Return to her, to thee so dear, 

Nor her sweet peace destroy. 

Take back the ring thy finger wore, 

It ne'er shall sully mine ; 
I loved thee once ; I plight no more 

At thy unhallowed shrine. 



THE EDITOR'S GRAVE. 

[HE sward was damp with falling dew, 
The moanina; wind around me blew 



And sadly came, from wood and glade, 
A dirge for him so lowly laid. 

The vault let down its sombre gray, 
Night turned her key upon the day, 
And, near and far, on moving mote, 
My dreamy sorrow seemed to float. 

As floats the soul when death is near, 
And pulse is low with ebbing fear, 
So sped my life at every breath, 
Which closer drew me into death. 

As weeping makes the soul divine, 
My spirit rose from its decline, 
And lay, above my tears, at rest, 
£y chastening sadness calm and blest. 
90 



THE EDITOR'S GRAVE. 9 1 

Ere yet the shades obscured my view, 
And round huia Gloom his mantle drew, 
Upon the West's entombing roll 
I traced the embers of his soul ; 

And in the tinges mingling there, 
I saw Life's contest with Despair, 
And, in the last dissolving ray, 
One noble spirit fade away. 

The sun, the glory — all is past, 
And buried in the depths at last. 
What recks it now, his labor done, 
The garlands he had lost or won ? 

By honor and by conscience led, 
Truth's halo glowed around his head, 
And filled his pen with golden light. 
To brand the wrong and gem the right. 

On a world's pulse he laid his hand, 
By every clime his thoughts were fanned ; 
The fibrils of His jewelled mind 
Were strained in glory for his kind. 



92 THE EDITOR'S GRAVE. 

Oft rising high to God, his King, 

Heaven's bending arch he made his bov/^ 

The lightning's flash his pliant string, 
And sprung his thunder at the foe. 

Against the wrong his touch was keen, 
Yet bore no trace of vulgar spleen ; 
He ne'er in rage his weapon broke ; 
The touch was stronger than the stroke. 

Obscure in toil, cheated of fame, 
He loved his labor all the same ; 
He knew, whate'er that labor cost, 
In life or death there's nothing lost. 

Here lies the poor neglected scribe. 
Whom no man's purse could ever bribe ; 
His crown of glory was his trust; 
His dust now mingles with the just; 

And from it forth the rose shall spring. 
And through that rose the zephyrs sing ; 
And o'er it rest an angel's boon. 
As calm as grave beneath the moon. 



I SHALL RISE WITH THE LARK. 



SHALL rise with the lark at the break of the 
morn, 

With a garland of hope that the day shall adorn ; 
And from angels above joyful rays shall descend, 
With the bloom of my spirit their lustre to blend. 

From the rise of the sun to the wane of its flame, 
I shall find my true praise in the lisp of my name 
!^y the child-lips I love ; and, whatever betide, 
I shall keep my heart warm for my own fireside. 

Fair friendship may greet me, as forward I go, 
And fame, for the moment, its guerdon bestow ; 
But the smiles of my babes are more dear to my soul 
Than all that the world or its splendors control, 
93 



94 / SHALL RISE WITH THE LARK. 

As the rays of the sun are the light of the earth, 
The eyes of my darlings are the joy of my hearth ; 
As the zephyrs at eve breathe balm to the bowers, 
Sweet songs through my halls shed the perfume of 
flowers. 

Their salvos of joy, giving strength to my will, 
O'er the trials of life, are encouragement still ; 
Nor sorrow, nor torment, with me shall abide. 
While I keep my heart warm for my own fireside. 

Should my fair rose of morning at evening decay, 
And the star that I followed decline with the day, 
I'll turn from a world which is mournfully wide. 
With a heart that beats warm for my own fireside. 

Let home-love, and peace, and contentment be mine, 
While the revel I shun, and the quicksands of wine ; — 
Let me think of the mother who once was my bride,. 
'Till I glow with the charm of my own fireside. 






THE GHOST OF CASTLE MORR. 



ROUD Castle Morr, above the lake, 
For centuries stood in solemn gray, 
And round its brow the thorn and brake, 
Entwined and trailed, as chaplets lay. 



From cliff and tower the eye might range 
Along the breast of Scotia's Isle, 

And view, amidst no cosmos change, 
The shaft of many a ruined pile. 

Lord Melmont, proud of blood and name^ 
Was master long of Castle Morr, 

And grandees to his banquets came 
From sultry Ind and frigid Nor'. 

The lights were lit in Melmont's halls, 
As evening June had veiled her head ;. 

And proudly shone along the walls 
The symbols of the glorious dead. 
95 



96 THE GHOST OF CASTLE MORR. 

The shield, the inace, the mail were there, 
The javelin, bow, the swinging glave ; 

And plaided clans, with strong limbs bare, 
Smiled, from their portraits, on the brave. 

The banquet spread, the gallant guest 
Is bowed to place around the board ; 

The bow's returned with lofty crest, 
And manner grave, and civil word. 

And fairest dames of high degree, 
With melting love upon their lips, 

And shoulders bare, and bosoms free, 
Advance with smiles and coyish slips. 

And DoRAH sweet, the nuptial bride. 
With curving neck and regal head. 

In all the wealth of beauty's pride. 
By bowing valor forth is led. 

The banquet o'er, the song went round : 
The knights sang praise of woman's love ; 

The ladies, by nice favor bound. 
Sang Scotia's lords high over Jove. 



THE GHOST OF CASTLE MORR. 97 

Now, why doth Melmont's face grow pale, 
On this his eve of marriage vows ? 

What low, sweet voice floats on the gale ? 
What sudden pain contracts his brows ? 

A soldier proud was Melmont brave, 
Whose valiant deeds on India's plains 

Sent foes in legions to their grave. 
And gave a peace to broad domains. 

When battle raised its rueful head. 
With waving plume and sabre bright, 

On champing steed bold Melmont led. 
With Princess Sahla at his right. 

When " Charge the foe ! " he gave command, 
And quick and thick the missiles flew. 

Fair Sahla waved her dauntless hand, 
And from her zone her weapon drew. 

She fought two battles locked in one : 
While courage swept her to the foe, 

To spur and cheer her troopers on, 
Her love engaged her lover's woe. 



98 THE GHOST OF CASTLE MORR. 

Pale, sunk with fear, she saw the bolts 

That rang in air round Melmont's head,. 

And all her prowess met revolts 
In sudden darts of love and dread. 

Nor laggard shown in Melmont's love : 
Behind the window of his thought, 

And fierce resolve his name to prove. 
Affection's web love's weaver wrought. 

Oh, heavy day ! Oh, luckless charge 
That bore fair Sahla to the van. 

Where, fighting on the battle's marge, 
She captive fell to Hindostan ! 

What doom awaits this lover true, 
Who fled her rajah's royal halls. 

And from a Scottish chieftain drew 

That love whose thraldom disenthralls ?■ 

Deep passion now was mixed with pain 
In Melmont's ardent, raging breast ; 

But well the soldier could restrain 
All outward sign of rude unrest. 



THE GHOST OF CASTLE MORR. 99 

The Brahmin plot and Hindoo skill 
Returned the Princess to her sire, 

Whose kindly breast o'er captious will 
Could never of affection tire. 

As fancy's lamp pursues the light 
That floats around in fiction's mind, 

Through gleamings slight of hope in night 
His love sad Melmont seeks to find. 

He storms the shaman priest's retreat, 
He storms the rajah's frowning wall ; 

He's everywhere, with flying feet, 
And bulwarks echo at his call. 

Within, without, beyond the bounds 
Of priest's and rajah's stern control. 

Swift vanished hopes and hollow sounds 
Are all that reach sad Melmont's soul. 

Now ten long years their tides have rolled 
Since India's air his brow had fanned — 

Since Sahla sweet and Melmont bold 

Their love and life had pledged and planned. 



lOO THE GHOST OF CASTLE MORR. 

And now that voice again is heard, 
Despite of friends, despite of foes, 

That won the heart of Scotland's laird 
Along Himmaleh's broad plateaus. 

She sings the song he loved to hear 
Below the stars, when winds were still, 

AVhen from the heart there swelled a tear. 
Which rose and fell at music's trill. 

A gem illumes his searching eye — 
The ring he gave her with a kiss, 

When love, like waves, rolled mountain high^ 
And all the world was vales of bliss. 

Now darker shades rise on the wall, 
And whispered words, in lighter tone, 

Conjecture forms, and keenly fall 
On fears that all dislike to own. 

All sadly from the banquet rose 
The noble host of Castle Morr ; 

And his proud heart seemed full of woes, 
Which none divined the reason for. 



THE GHOST OF CASTLE MORR. lOI 

Now hurried looks meet anxious eyes, 
And Sahla's calm and gentle mien 

The scrutiny of all defies 

Of who she is or who has been. 

Her olive hands and olive face, 

Her liquid eyes of Orient hue, 
Her gliding step and languid grace, 

Where'er she moved could all subdue. 

She quits the hall with gentle ways. 
And follows fast in Melmont's wake ; 

While jealousy the bride betrays, 
And speechless hurries to the lake. 

The kinsman of the noble bride. 

At Melmoxt's conduct sore enraged, 

Now flash their dress-swords from their side, 
And hot in converse stand engaged. 

Their words are i^s^^ indignant, strong ; 

From what they heard and what they saw 
Of Dorah's grief and Melmont's wrong, 

Suspicion feeds on lines they draw. 



I02 THE GHOST OF CASTLE MORR. 

Enough ! enough ! Revenge is near ! 

Through lawn and bower and vista fair 
The pride-stung nobles search and steer, 

But find not Melmont anywhere. 

There is a room in Castle Morr, 

A secret chamber, quaint and grand, 

Which few e'er knew the service for, 
Save he whose word was in command. 

To shield her from undue reproof 
By tongues unruly, sharp and free. 

There Sahla's placed, from all aloof, 
And cautious Melmont turns the key. 

Now from the window where she sits 
The Princess muses on the night ; 

While shadow after shadow flits 
By fern and fir, within her sight. 

For Melmont's life those shadows seek, 
.And for his life he boldly stands, 

In calm defense prepared to speak. 
And fairly meet all fair demands. 



THE GHOST OF CASTLE MORR. 103 

But passion rules the omened hour, 
And fury strikes him to the ground ; 

'Which Sahla sees from yonder tower, 
And breaks her heart-strings at a bound. 

Now pity's tongue the tale will tell, 
How gentle hands, unknown to fame, 

Had set a plant where Melmont fell, 
And called it by that hero's name. 

E'er since that hour, at midnight tide, 

A curtain of the blackest lace 
•On windowed Morr is drawn aside. 

Disclosing there a pallid face. 

It looks a minute down the lake, 

It glances round in secret pain. 
As if it feared some foe awake ; 

And then the curtain's drawn again. 

For eons folk have come to see. 

O'er hill and dale and jagged tor, 
The DoRAH lake, the Melmont tree. 

And Sahla's ghost at Castle Morr. 



OH, WEARY COMES THE NIGHT. 

H, weary comes the night, 
But sadder still the morn, 
For who would see the light 
With love that is forlorn? 

Then die, poor lingering flame, 
For who would suffer under 

The mocking of love's name 
When hearts are rent asunder ? 

And should my memory wake, 
Love's last fond look revealing, 

Let death the mirror break, 
Its joy and woe concealing. 

Oh, who can bear the pangs, 

When love, unfettered, soaring, 

On barb and breaker hangs. 

The sweets of life outpouring ? 
104 



OH, WEARY COMES THE NIGHT. IO5 

Ah, me, to feel love's pain 

Through pride's high chambers creeping! 
Like sunbeams in the rain, 

Love shines while I am weeping. 



TO HER SPIRIT. 

LITTLE bird flies out of my heart, 
A bird all white as snow ; 
And I am sad for the void she leaves, 
A void none else can know. 

Into the gloom she takes her way; 

My eyes grow dim with grief; 
Broken the shell, empty the nest. 

And faith deserts belief. 

I call to my bird to come back to me. 

But a raven comes instead ; 
And over my soul he seeks control, 

And on my breast his bed. 

Far up in yon cloud a rift I see — 

I see my love go through, 

On angel wings, in a halo divine. 

That God alone should view. ■ 
106 



A LOVE THOUGHT. 

^OVELY, sweet, and gentle maiden, 

How fares thy heart with mine ? 
Lovely, sweet, and gentle maiden, 
Fairest star in fairest Aiden, 
Oh, dost thou know I pine ? 

Bright diamond of Love's morning dew, 

There is no place so fair 
To holy love and joyful eyes. 
And sacred thoughts and sacred sighs, 

As by the Delaware. 

The lily beats against my breast, 

And I the balm inhale ; 
But as I reach to pluck the rose. 
Around the gem the petals close, 

And my poor efforts fail. 



I08 A LOVE THOUGHT. 

On me, from thy celestial glow, 
Descends the trembling ray ; 
But as I would that ray control, 
And light the chambers of my soul, 
It fades — it fades away. 

Come, zephyrs, from my love afar, 

Come, solace to my care ; 
Oh, ne'er through perfumed garden strayed 
A more redolent budding maid 

Than the rose of Delaware. 



MY DOLLIE. 



HAT is my sorrow to others? 
Who weeps, my Dollie, for you ? 
'Tis more than the grief of a mother's 
That pierces me through and through. 

Strangled you lay before me, 

Strangled by cruel death, 
Before one thought came o'er me 

That you were robbed of breath. 

You were to me my morning. 

Before my toil begun, 
I in your beauty scorning 

All toil beneath the sun. 

My angel, I loved you dearly, 

No tongue can utter my woe ; 

My angel, I loved you dearly, 

With a love that angels know. 
109 



no A/Y DOLLIE. 

You're gone forever, my darling, 

And I can find no rest ; 
You're gone forever, my darling, 

And left me a bleeding breast. 

Your eyes were bright, my beauty. 
And large and sweet and brown * 

Your eyes were bright, my beauty. 
With lashes drooping down. 

I knew your talk was simple, 
And I saw, when you'd begin, 

The playing of the dimple 
On little cheek and chin. 

Oh, for a day of life again ! 

Oh, for an hour to love you ! 
My wretched heart will break with pai» 

To see the sod above you. 

O snow, be kind to Dollie, 
She tossed you on her hair ; 

O rose be kind to Dollie, 
For she was sweet and fair. 



A/y DOLLIE. Ill' 

Weary and sad my soul is gone, 

In spirit land to find you, 
While in my arms, O cherished one, 

Unto my breast I bind you. 

In my tearful, bitter sorrow, 

Hope looks trembling to the day ; 

Yet from grief I solace borrow 
That an angel leads the way. 



MISS NIGHT. 



|kW|ISS Night she is a winsome lass, 
i MffiJ i j^Yid dresses with a tidy care; 



The moon she makes her looking-glass, 
And with the stars she braids her hair. 

She frolics over Juno's bars, 

With silence in her hidden hand ; 

And then she laughs, and flings her stars 
At every lover in the land. 

She dips her dark limbs in the sea ; 

Above the cloud her face is hid ; 
Against the wind she bends her knee, 

While seated on Aurora's lid. 

The broad expanse is her domain. 
Her pinnace is the scudding gale ; 

Restraining which she sets a chain 
Of dappling waves against her sail. 



3//SS NIGHT. 113 

Behind the gauze that floats between 
Her gown of black and hood of gray, 

What would be seen remains unseen, 
And passes to a brighter day. 

And thus the light that follows hope, 
Our doubtings veil it from the eye; 

And here in darkness man must grope, 
Since light of faith's beyond the sky. 



SPEAK TRUTH. 

I^^IpEAK truth and sense, or silent still remain, 
i^™ l Nor edge your words to give your neighbor 

pain. 
By honest art must man for man be used ; 
By brutish man is only man abused. 

Before you speak, be satisfied the soul 

Is in full sympathy and full control ; 

Temper too oft the thoughtless voice succeeds, 

And shames the soul by wrong and foolish deeds. 

Wild are the words that on mad passion fly ; 

Like sparks they're uttered, and like sparks they die. 



114 



THE COMMUNIST. 



jlHAT wealth is stealth is now the cry, 
SI And rogues are they that keep it ; 



And he's a knave who'd plot and try 
To raise and hoard and heap it. 

His house or bed, his coat or hat, 
He should assign or lend it ; 

What right has he to this or that, 
If he can not defend it ? 

The right of one is right of all, 
The learned tramp well knows it ; 

If with a blow the rich must fall, 
The sportive wight bestows it. 

When fever maddens in the veins. 
We soothe and cheat and nurse it ; 

'Twould only aggravate our pains 
To rage and rave and curse it. 
"5 



II 6 THE COMMUNIST. 

But mortals make the error strange, 
To right a wrong, misuse it ; 

It is within true wisdom's range, 
Its life is to abuse it. 

From end to end this land is free 
To those who would enjoy it. 

And he's a knave of low degree 
Who'd labor to destroy it. 

He's but a slave who would complain, 
With hands and health to lift him ; 

For patient work will comfort gain, 
And forward ever shift him. 

Know this, ye men of sloth and woe, 
And to your faith ye pin it : 

The rank of him is never low 
Who has the brain to win it. 

A day will tell the all of life, 

There's nothing for the morrow ; 

'Tis mind that suffers in the strife, 
And bears the weight of sorrow. 



LINES TO A FRIEND. 



"By heart is sad to-night, my friend, 
i And I am bent with care ; 



The sorrows that with memories blend, 
Make life too hard to bear. 

I 've had my day ! I 've run my race ! 

My life is aimless now ; 
And all its woes my fingers trace 

In furrows on my brow. 

Old friends are dead, or scattered wide, 

Across the world's domain ; 
Nor day nor night, nor time nor tide, 

Will bring them back again. 

My dreams of youth — long past and gone- 

I would not now recall ; 
For time has made me old and wan, 

And I but wait my fall. 
117 



Il8 LINES TO A FRIEND. 

No tears shall damp my faded cheek, 

No joy shall fill my breast ; 
This world has naught that I would seek, 

I only long for rest. 



KINGS ARE MADE BY SLAVES. 



I EN of living thought, awake ! 



a Men of will and brain and nerve ! 
Chains which gall your freedom, break ! 

Scorn the hands a despot serve ! 
Let the voice of Freedom ring : 
Only slaves can make a king. 

Man was born of Nature's God, 

Not a thing, at tyrant's call. 
Not a crouching, fawning clod, 

Asking leave to lick and crawl. 
Let insulted manhood vow : 
None but slaves to despots bow. 

Come you from a slavish land, 
Where to king you bent the knee ? 

Touch not, serf, a freeman's hand, 
Till repentance makes you free. 
119 



I20 KINGS ARE MADE BY SLAVES.. 

He's a slave in heart and soul 
Who will suffer king's control. 

Where's the vigor of your blood, 
Crouching, cringing, fawning dog? 

Are your veins but sluggish mud ? 
Is your head a brainless log ? 

Let the cry of freemen ring : 

Dogs alone obey a king. 

See yon slave in want and rags ! 

See him cower and bare the head, 
As his brazen despot wags, 

Struts and shakes, with pompous tread. 
Weep, O Manhood, at the sight ! 
Serfdom base, and ravished right ! 

God of Patience ! see the slaves 
Marshalled forth in bold array, 

Bearing arms to fight for knaves ! 
Murd'ring men for hireling pay ! 

Hear the air with God's voice ring : 

" None but slaves can make a king." 



KINGS ARE MADE BY SLAVES. 121 

What you are let tyrants know ; 

Do not act the craven slave ; 
Stamp your mettle with a blow 

On the head of kingly knave. 
Be whatever else you can, 
But, for Christ's sake 1 be a man ! 



THE FIRE. 

ARK !— that knell ! 
What means that bell ? — 



That rousing swell? 

It dies, it sinks in parted links. 

Again it thrills ! Again it fills ! 
Waking, shaking, leaping higher. 
In a flaming tongue of fire. 

See the smoke ! See the cloud ! 
Darker, denser, wider growing, 
Rising, falling, sweeping, blowing. 

Swift andwsager come the crowd, 
Rushing, pushing, shouting, yelling, 
Love to save, each bosom swelling — 
Swelling, swelling, swelling ! 



THE FIRE. 123 

Place the engine ! Seize the hose ! 
Let the water boldly float 
On the fiendish fiery foes, 
And the engine puff her throat. 

Oh, the flames ! Oh, the flames ! 
Winding, wafting, twisting, turning. 
Cracking, scorching, blazing, burning ! 
Burning, burning, burning ! 

Hear those names ! Hear those claims ! 
Save me, father ! Save me, mother ! 
Sister, save me ! Save me, brother ! 

Raise the stream ! Raise the stream ! 
Love and life are sinking, failing, 
Midst seas of flame there's loud bewailing, 
Whilst daring hearts the walls are scaling, 
Scaling, scaling, scaling ! 

Hark, that cry ! Hear that sigh ! 
Oh, that scream ! Horrors teem ! 
Mailed in might, stout hearts are wielding 
Axes bright, from danger shielding 
Life's last throbs nigh before they die. 



124 THE FIRE. 

Oh, the clashing ! oh, the crashing ! 
Madly rising, tearing, dashing, 
Wildly flouncing, flaring, flashing. 
Red flames lash the broken sash. 

Hark, hark, within — a breath, a din ! 
Groaning, moaning, clinging, grasping, 
Life on fire, a fireman clasping ! 
Clasping, clasping, clasping ! 

Now, now you see the flames are free ! 
Spouting, spreading, waving, soaring, 
Plunging, tossing, raging, roaring, 
In one hot sea of dread decree. 

The high-raised throws from spurting hose^ 
Tending, bending, warping, Winding, 
Seeking, chasing, meeting, blinding 
Each blast that blows from fiery foes. 

O God, that wall ! That prayer, that fall ! 
Ruin, wreck, and desolation, 
Ravage, waste, and devastation. 
Spread Death's sad pall dark over all. 



THE FIRE. 125 

Was it a beam, or brick, or stone 
Tore here the flesh, broke there a bone ? 
Matted and moiled, floats here and there, 
Clotted with blood, a tuft of hair. 

Look on that head ! See where the beam 
Bared to the scalp, and round the seam, 
Uprooted, loose, flying away. 
Hair by hair, wherever it may. 

That lurid glare ! That ghastly stare ! 
Bruised, maimed, and gashed, soiled, stained, 

and broken. 
Of former looks scarce left a token. 

Could those lips speak, how they could tell 
Of direful woe and fortune fell ! 
For mother's grief those eyes have shed ; 
For brother's pain that still heart bled. 

As on that shattered form I gaze. 
Where deepening gloom emits its rays, 
Where life might linger, yet is not, 
I waver in man's future lot. 



126 THE FIRE, 

On that brow a thought is molded, 
On those lips a word lies folded ; 
Immortal word — immortal thought ! 
What seraph fleet the whisper caught? 

What now is light or gloom, or earth or air, 

To that wild stare ? 

Or friend or foe, or joy or woe, 

Or frown or smile, or trust or guile. 

To that dead glare ? 

Peace rests but in the tomb. 



FRIENDSHIP AND LOVE. 



HE heart is peopled by friendship's eye 
Msl The soul is moved by love ; 
Under the sky all friendships die ; 
Love ever glows above. 

Friendship is nothing, love is all ; 

The world was dead when love was born : 
Love is the soul, which flees our fall ; 

Friendship was made for love to scorn. 



JAMES T. BRADY. 



m 



|lOO soon, alas ! the link is broken, 
ii Too soon the days of friendship o'er; 
Too soon, oh death ! it must be spoken, 
Our own dear Brady is no more. 

The summer heat will come and go. 
The rolling surge will spend its spray, 

And gentle winds will softly blow 
Along the beach of Rockaway ; 

But not for him who paced its shore, 
In love to hear its breaker's sound ; 

He'll see, alas ! that beach no more. 
No more his footprints there be found, 

Farewell, my friend of hand and heart, 
Above thy grave let daisies bloom ; 

The strain which drew our souls apart 
Bowed love and sorrow at thy tomb. 

128 



JAMES T. BRADY. 1 29 

Thou wert the idol of thy race ; 

Genius was jealous of her son, 
And, finding none to fill thy place, 

She claimed the laurels thou hadst won. 



DO NOT ASK ME. 



O not ask me, pet, I pray, 
Why I linger, why I stay ;. 
There's no longer left for me 
Face or form I care to see. 

Save one image in my heart, 
Save that figure's counterpart. 
Which, as cup of rosy wine, 
Makes my life and love divine. 

Absence never friendship killed. 
Love reflected, never chilled ; 
Therefore, sweet, this maxim hold^ 
And thy love will ne'er grow cold. 

Love is nectar, nectar's love, 
As my lips to thine will prove — 
Prove like roses, tip to tip. 
With love's dewdrop on each lip. 
130 



DO NOT ASK ME. I3I 

If my passion I repress, 
Do not think I love thee less ; 
In its furnace chou shalt find 
It has left the dross behind. 

Love is fancy in undress, 
Warm to touch and hot to press ; 
And that fancy, velvet-toed, 
Makes my heart a beaten road. 

Do not ask me, pet, I pray, 
If my love has died away ; 
While I dwell upon my fair, 
Such a question is despair. 



ADIEU. 

IhOUGH cold the word, it must be spoken, 
Though crushed the heart and deep the sigh; 
Though every chord of friendship's broken, 
At last it comes — the low good-by. 

Sadder than death that word to me, 
Sadder than dreams beyond the grave ; 

Yet in its sound I know I'm free. 
Ah, free to be my freedom's slave. 

Our happy days our sorrows count, 

Pleasure's the measure of our pain. 
And dreams of youth the flowing fount 

That pours those sorrows back amain. 

When winds were light and days were bright, 
There came no breath our joys to mar ; 

I knew no morn, I knew no night. 
You were to me a noonday star. 
132 



ADIEU. 133 

But time, ah, time, what changes bring ! 

What mysteries strange we leave behind ! 
Like ivy old, sad memories cling 

Around the ruins of the mind. 

Memory, through its mist of years, 

Like struggling moonbeams through the cloud, 
Or fitful light through pressing tears, 

In mockery gleams above my shroud. 

While still to me the world seems fair, 

And nature fresh in all its bloom, 
I nurse th(; reptile of despair, 

I live but in the future's gloom. 

My hopes in life forever gone, 

The joys of youth long past recall, 
A mournful waste, I still live on, 

Nor caring now how soon I fall. 

Farewell, dear friend — it must be said ; 

The time has come for you and me 
To lay our friendships with the dead, 

And life resign to fate's decree. 



SELF-COMMUNING. 



1|ERE I stand upon Eternity's verge, 
1 The All-Unknown, whose sombre depth is 



space, 
And the wind its walls. For that light I ask 
That's more than day. It coldly shuns ray quest ; 
While on me fall the vastness and distress 
Of nothingness. Within me rules the spirit 
Of unrest, as on flouting time is breathed 
The substance of my life — a boon no more 
Shall I reclaim, if fitful life's a boon 
To him that spurns its narrow paths and curbing 
Bounds. The universe is but the purse-string 
Of my thoughts, which, from the vast, no conclu- 
sions 
Draw, save that I am an atom ; of what, 
I know not ; for what, I know not ; nor can 
The mind reveal. The gray frost of scoffing 
Years has passed behind my destination, 
134 



SEL F- CO MM UNIXG. 1 3 5 

And still all shapes their mysteries hug, and darker 
Spread the vail. There's naught defined or reason 
Tuned. 'Gainst my judgment's eye a world ot 

worlds 
Is set. No word had I in my creation. 
Since die I must, why should I first exist ? 
Why this earth's probation of pain, and doubt, 
And longing ? Why was I first born to earth, 
And not to heaven ? Yet, if joy is not alloy 
Without, wherefore Paradise ? Alloy's the salt 
Of listless ease, and phlegm, and sloth, as air 
Conditions all the solar heat. Without 
An opposite, naught can be discerned. 
The world is ruled by negatives. Alone 
By negatives is harmony produced ; 
Negative is man, negative is space, 
Negative is every aspiration. 
The cold must temper heat, and heat the cold. 
'Tis opposition in the elements 
That tills the earth and feeds its plants and flowers. 
Opposite are all nature's primal laws. 
Alone from this are love and worship born 



1 36 SEL F- CO MM UNING. 

Between the sexes. Nor love nor worship 
Elsewhere can be proved. Man can not worship 
Man ; nor woman, woman. We can not feast 
On that we do not eat. We can not worship 
That we have not seen. The magnet eye alone- 
Draws worship to the soul. Diverging types 
Alone converge to nature's will and law. 
Is heaven, then, a place for languor and decay ? 
The name is false — a bribe to ignorance, 
To act an honest part to all mankind, — 
A duty born to all, save brutish breasts. 

Within my mental vision I find no ray 
Its light to shed upon abysmal thought. 
The sun and moon are orbs that give me light ; 
My friends they are, and yet I know them not. 
Relief I find along the spirit air; 
It comes from good men's prayers. Still I know it 

not; 
While into human or angelic figure 
Mold it I would, and, in speech full earnest, 
Entreat its inspiration and advice. 

The rugs and wraps of summer winds protect 



SELF- CO MM UNING. 1 3 f 

Me from the solar heat and cool my blood. 
Space, the food of winds, has knowledge of me ; 
Space gives me to the winds to soothe or chill ; 
The winds know me — not I the winds — because 
They nip or fan me, which I can not requite. 

O, dream of dreams, my dream in mystic life ! 
That floats me midway in soft and stoic 
Air, in trance or spell divine, disjoining 
Soul from body, all mundane thought from rest 
Supernal, till the breath of Jove with incense 
Fills my soul ! O, solace of mystic dreams, 
Which all unrobes me of my leaden cares ! 
Sweetness, and balm, and joy are thine to give ; 
Sweetness and perfume from thy budding lips 
Dilate my soul, and waft my senses high ! 
Bright as seraph that sheds a light from heaven 
On him whose dreams are stretched beyond the 

spheres ! 
Fragrant and rare as spiced winds from the South ! 
Joy of my spirit, mystic life thou art ! 
Charmed is the balm thy dulcet dreams impart. 
From whence come thy delights I crave to know. 



I 3 8 SELF- CO MM UN INC. 

Thou touchstone of my soul's divinity ? 
They come in the morn, ere the voice of man 
Shake and dispel the slumber of the air ; 
They come at eventide, when the silent dew 
Descends, as a blessing, on the hot robes 
Of retiring day ; and they come when all 
The flowing drapery of the sky is spread 
Before its mirror, that vestal nun, the moon. 
In them I find an inspiration found 
Not in books of best and wisest men. 
A glory to my senses the roses 
Of mystic life expand, and the inmost 
Chambers of my soul are tenanted with 
Seraphim, reposing on beds elysian. 
Unbless me of this dream, and I am naught, 
Save a speck in fortune's eye, by sullen 
Doubts tossed upon reflection's tear and woe. 

Unknown life, filled with fancies and with shrouds. 
And dark creations, which are fiends fantastic 
To my truer self, and into wizard 
Sadness awe me, and self-desertion, till, 
In the strength of my weakness, I am lost. 



SELF-COMMUNING. 1 39 

While conscious weakness nurses force and will, 
Man is the shadow ; and the shadow, man. 
By himself, not of himself, he lives, moves. 
Thinks, and dreams, and steeps and melts his hours 

away. 
His pith is weakness in his maddened rage ; 
And a fly's wing might his wild passion rule. 

Turning to youth, I gaze upon his face. 
His bright eyes glow with innocence and joy ; 
His silken locks inspire the air with zephyrs 
Heavenly. He's all divine from heaven's hand. 
His beauty brings me grief, for that beauty 
Will not last. Care and trouble too soon will 
Come, to rain their misery upon his brow. 
Oh, the gloom, the sadness, and the longing ! 
The dawn — the light — the nothing ! 
■Oh, heart ! oh, soul ! Where's that joyful kingdom 
Of my days, o'er whose flowery lawns and vistas 
Fair the winds from heaven my breast with music 

thrilled .?— 
When to the fulness of its glory rose 
My soul, in the joy of its sovereignty ; 



140 SELF-COMMUNING. 

And on its radiant vision refulgent 
Shone tlie fated star of hope, when love was hope, 
And gentle eyes were dreams of bliss, and all 
Things breathed a prayer for courteous peace con- 
tinued? 
That was the time to die : in time of joy 
To part with joy, and shun its waiting sorrow ; 
Ere in the tender heart were built dark caves. 
For vulpine thought to dwell in and look back. 

Life and death are only one, for life is 
Death to think upon. 

What's this narrow world }■ 
A surging sea of drowning men, who snap. 
And snarl, and bite, even while they sink, in lust 
Of fame and gold and visions of the heart. 
The future is but the past. All is mist 
And vapor, and turbulence of the mind. 
The world's glory is as a drop of water 
On the sand ; a city's grandeur passes 
Like a flash on the breath of time. Towers 
And castles vanish like dewdrops in the sun. 
Tis to the past we build, not the future ; 



SELF-COMMUNING. 1 4.1 

All our plans and toil we leave behind us. 

As onward we move, 'tis only to strike 

The weary breast 'gainst the frost of sorrow. 

The rocks and hills are but the snuff of time ; 

With time's finger we touch them, and they crumble. 

The mind outlives whatever it may see. 

For thinking eyes turn all things into dust. 

The hope and beauty of the universe 

In the stern shadows of reflection die. 

We sweat and bear the burdens of a day, 

Then close the eyes in sleep forevermore. 

Life and death are poised on fate, outreaching 

Far the valid clutch of reason's fingers, 

As thought grinds thought to nothing. Our flesh 

dies 
On our bones, our nails wither, and our limbs 
Are forsaken by the vigor of our days. 
Let censuring thought, we crave, be dumb, 
While the past, like an arid desert, burns 
Our gazing eyeballs. From the scorching present 
We onward fly to a future of doubt and haze. 

The seasons come ; the seasons go ; they blossom, 



142 SELF-COMMUNING. 

They fade and bloom again. We're born ; we blos- 
som, 
And we die. Why not bloom again, like that 
Nature, of which we are the soul's essence ? 
Return to life is nature's vital function 
But fulfilled. Our spirits walk the deep, 
Or skim the air, as living breath is mingled 
With the winds. The world's a grave. Again we live 
On human clay. We are the dead returned 
Again to life. 

A faith we reach and hold, 
But not the proof, that something rules beyond 
Our gift to know. And yet to know would be 
To doubt. We doubt the things we see; we doubt 
The words we speak ; we doubt the life within, 
Ere we move our limbs to prove that we exist. 
Even then we doubt. Thought's marrow is a dream. 
We live in the shambles of a reason 
That's questioned by a closer reason still. 
Knowledge is doubt ; life is fate; fate is dust. 
Greatness is greatest unexplained. Clothe dwarfs 
In mystery, and time will make them giants. 



SELF-COMMUNING. I4S- 

Learning pulverizes the living clay, 

And to coin a thought fulfils an aspiration. 

The world's a skiff on the river Time, 
And all are pilots, with diverging aims. 
Our brightest dream, gently rocked on the wave 
Of thought, palmy and blithe, is but the fleeting 
Spell of wan and wild-eyed sorrow's hectic 
Glow, which bears the soul, with muffled oar, be- 
yond 
A fated sea, to rest from human woe. 

Hill and dale, mountain and savanna, 
In busy life I view. Where'er the eye 
May roam, the countless herds graze and prosper ; 
The fruitful fields are laden with their gifts, 
And Mother Earth is dressed in vernal robes ; 
While her daughter. Spring, with buds of hope 
That mother's breast adorns. And all for what } 
For me to contemplate the passing scene. 
And in that contemplation have the balm 
Of pleasure's peace chilled by winds from open 

graves ; 
To contemplate man's tongue as the mind's bell. 



144 SELF-COMMUNING. 

And his mouth the stomach's hopper ; to gild 

With fancy a fond imagination : 

Making all space a universe of life ; 

Marshalling its plains with warriors of eld ; 

Awe-struck at Jehovah, in a chariot 

Of stars, crowned by His suns, attempered by 

His moons, and comets for His waving plumes. 

Tyrant custom forever censures light. 
Craven worship, with its snares, is but the craft 
Of kings, who draw it down from mystery 
To themselves, more loyal their slaves to hold. 
Fear no worship is, but cowardice rank. 
The slave's habiliment ; while learning is 
Prejudice ; and ignorance, superstition. 
As brazen suns aggrieve the heavenly stars. 
The soul divine is scourged by bigots' tongues. 
All is light of nothing. 

The trust of youth 
Is lost in the haze of age. To be unhappy 
Is to read and learn. When all is known that 
Can be known, we fail to hold a vision. 
Foe. waste, dissolution are all that time 



SELF- CO MM UNING. 1 45 

Can bring. We trust to-morrow, and distrust 
To-day. And life is this, and death : to-day- 
Is death ; to-morrow, life — the life of clay. 
Away we float on the dark wing of time, 
And naught remains, save the mockery of dust. 

Nature, God, and Man are the trinity 
Divine. One is all, and all are one. 'Tis 
The God within us, not without, our deepest 
Reverence claims, which is to know and ourselves 
Esteem as the only gods ; nor suffer 
This earth a king or slave endure. Wherefore 
Shall man worship ? Worship the sin 
That brought him on this earth ! What juggling 

fraud 
On Reason's God ! Wherefore have we reason, 
Save to understand ? Howe'er we may our 
Sense befog in mist of superstition 
And creeds insensate, the strong and steady eye 
Of discerning reason the mist dispels. 
And challenges the proof, lifting the mind 
Above the weight of matter. My godhead 
Reason is. Shall I forswear my godhead. 



1 46 SFZF- CO MM UNING. 

And live a lie ? — live a dumb creation, 
And place in contradictions tortuous all 
My spiritual trust, to sink beneath my 
Mental current of disdain ? How can man, 
Enlightened, his clear judgment's depths cajole, 
And live a hypocrite ? He's reason blind 
Who reasons not, and tyrant he who demands 
Our worship. There is a fabled power 
All mercy claims. Before his godly eyes 
Are moaning babes in flames of fire consumed ; 
Yet speaks he not, nor moves he in that love 
That sinful mortal might. Of jealous traits 
He is, and only him shall worship all, while 
Half the world by gross idolatry all 
Senses shame ; and yet the fabled wisdom 
Guides them not, but would them punish 
For that they know not of — a creature damn 
For light he never saw ! 

To the minds that 
Rise above their fellows, naught is real, save 
Imagination. Of life 'tis the essence. 
Tt gives to the palate, taste ; to the heart, pulse ; 



SELF-COMMUNING. 1 4/ 

To the soul, trust ; and to the will, conquest. 
It gives to genius bold that assertion 
That succeeds and all the world surprises. 

The orb of day ascends, and glows, and fades. 
As man, his youth, meridian, and decline. 
Fear is our habitation, and frail hope 
The door, through which we pass to joy still-born, 
On dark tides of rising sorrow. Never 
At rest, never at peace, till the last gleam 
Of flickering light flies the socket. And where 
The end } Perhaps in this : When time makes 

havoc 
With our last remains, their first consignment 
Being to worms and putrefaction, their next 
To dust, we're blown by whistling winds into 
The eye of him that preaches. 



THE CLOSE. 



IHE dew of the evening came down 
On cottage and village and town : 
It came like a prayer on the sun-burdened air, 
And rested on rest as a crown. 

There was peace in the haze on the hill, 
There was peace in the rhyme of the rill ; 
And the robin's rich note on the air was afloat, 
With a chirp, and a song, and a trill. 

Though she passed long ago from my mind, 
Though she left me in sadness behind, 
She came back to me true in the fall of the dew, 
Once again our affections to bind. 

There was peace in the gloom on my breast, 
As I looked to the far-sinking West ; 
In that dreamland I gazed on bright altars that blazed 

As beacons where the weary found rest. 

148 



THE CLOSE. 149 

In the dew of the evening that fell 
On mountain and streamlet and dell, 
Proud hopes of the past before me were cast, 
Their tales of disaster to tell. 

I was glad that the close of my day 
And my darkness was not far away ; 
And my eyelids were wet, but not with regret, 
In the twilight of longings' decay. 

And the dew of my dreaming it fell 
On the ashes within my heart's cell ; 
And the eve of life's close drooped her head in repose, 
As she whispered, " All yet shall be well ! " 



rffc,% 



^SW 



^hr*^ 



^^f^m^, 



>«&>.- 



M^V^ 






.*^^*,iw.^^?!%^^^4<: 



^*7^ 



*^^^ 



